[The clamour against the proposed Financial Resolution and Deposit
Insurance (FRDI) Bill had gotten louder with the All India Bank Employees
Association (AIBEA), one of the biggest unions in the banking sector,
announcing strike against the draft legislation. Bank depositors had also
protested the 'bail-in' clause that allegedly could have brought potential
harm to deposits. In the last few days, the bill created apprehension and
panic amongst depositors that the government was contemplating to liquidate
the banks, and that their money would be lost in case the bill was passed
as a law.
As per the draft FRDI bill, the proceeds from sale of assets of a bank
would have first gone to insured depositors. In the previous regime, the
depositors were insured for only Rs 1 lakh irrespective of the deposit made
in a bank. The new bill, however, made no mention of the maximum amount of
insured deposit. Experts said there was a possibility that the government
and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) would have kept the same limit or
lower. In the draft bill, the depositors stood at fifth position in the
waterfall mechanism for distribution of whatever was left in a bank in case
of a collapse. ***These deposits, which would be mostly uninsured as the
maximum insured deposit in the earlier bill was only Rs 1 lakh, were under
threat of not getting anything in return.*** (Emphasis aded.)]

http://www.businesstoday.in/current/policy/parliamentary-standing-committee-frdi-bill-deferred-budget-session/story/266067.html

Parliamentary standing committee defers FRDI bill, to submit report in
Budget Session

BusinessToday.in   New Delhi     Last Updated: December 15, 2017  | 15:13
IST

Parliamentary standing committee defers FRDI bill, to submit report in
Budget Session

The controversial Financial Resolution and Deposit Insurance (FRDI) bill,
which was introduced in the Lok Sabha in August, was deferred by the
parliamentary standing committee on Friday, reported India Today. The
committee was looking into the bill that aimed to provide a resolution to
deal with bankruptcies in banks, insurance companies, and other financial
intermediaries through a 'Resolution Corporation' and a 'Corporation
Insurance Fund'. The committee scrutinising the bill will submit its report
in the upcoming Budget Session.

The clamour against the proposed Financial Resolution and Deposit Insurance
(FRDI) Bill had gotten louder with the All India Bank Employees Association
(AIBEA), one of the biggest unions in the banking sector, announcing strike
against the draft legislation. Bank depositors had also protested the
'bail-in' clause that allegedly could have brought potential harm to
deposits. In the last few days, the bill created apprehension and panic
amongst depositors that the government was contemplating to liquidate the
banks, and that their money would be lost in case the bill was passed as a
law.

As per the draft FRDI bill, the proceeds from sale of assets of a bank
would have first gone to insured depositors. In the previous regime, the
depositors were insured for only Rs 1 lakh irrespective of the deposit made
in a bank. The new bill, however, made no mention of the maximum amount of
insured deposit. Experts said there was a possibility that the government
and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) would have kept the same limit or
lower. In the draft bill, the depositors stood at fifth position in the
waterfall mechanism for distribution of whatever was left in a bank in case
of a collapse. These deposits, which would be mostly uninsured as the
maximum insured deposit in the earlier bill was only Rs 1 lakh, were under
threat of not getting anything in return.

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